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Republican lawmakers seek clarity on Trump's "anti-weaponization fund"

1 sources3 storiesFirst seen 5/21/2026Score48Mixed Progress
Single Source
CoverageRecencyEngagementVelocityBignessConfidenceClipability
Bigness
48
Coverage
13
Recency
95
Engagement
21
Velocity
100
Confidence
28
Clipability
60
Polarization
0
Claims
4
Contradictions
0
Breakthrough
50

Sentiment Mix

Positive0%
Neutral100%
Negative0%

Geography

North America

Expert Signals

CBS News - Top Stories

source3 mentions

AI-Generated Claims

Generated from linked receipts; click sources for full context.

The Justice Department has a new $1.776 billion fund, designated to pay people who allege that politics played a role in their prosecutions under the Biden administration.

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Weijia Jiang has more details.

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​Michael Cohen, a Trump lawyer-turned-critic, is planning to apply for money from the Justice Department's new "anti-weaponization fund," he told CBS News.

Supported by 1 story

A growing number of lawmakers are speaking out against the Justice Department's $1.7 billion "anti-weaponization fund." CBS News congressional correspondent Nikole Killion has more.

Supported by 1 story

Related Events

Timeline (3 stories)

Receipts (3)

Bias Snapshot

Center
Left 0%Center 100%Right 0%
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